Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Colin Kakama's avatar

This essay covers it so well !! I've been trying to understand how the three research methods correlate to each other. Now I do ;-

> Academia: the more CNS publications, the merrier. That's all the research we want to do 😁

> Industry: we will ONLY do research if there's customers already ready to pay for it 🤑💰

> ARPAs/FROs: we will do research even if it's unpublishable and has no customers 😈 BUT the only way for it to make financial sense is for someone ultra rich funds us🥲 (government or billionaires )

Expand full comment
tom abeles's avatar

In the 60's through the late 70's there was a zeit geist within academia which focused on interdisciplinary learning and research. Some institutions even created formal "departments" with artists, humanities, science faculty who were to work or consult in teams or other structures. Alas, the pub/perish disease was endemic costing the loss of scholars who risk or didn't fit the mold leaving bits and pieces across the academy. Today with the rise of artificial intelligence, some are finding that "weird" scholarship is emergent. Many discoveries of Nobel quality are led by academics with degrees in two or more disciplines. Billionaires are funding "no strings attached" multiyear programs in the spirit of ARPA and other "blue sky" research. There is even suggestions of AI think tanks (an AI Society?) and collaboration of humans and AGI bots, now ubiquitous within various public and private sectors

Expand full comment
5 more comments...